Recent work has shown that listeners process words faster if said by a member of the group that typically uses the word. This paper further explores how the social distributions of words affect lexical access by exploring whether access is facilitated by invoking more abstract social categories. We conduct four experiments, all of which combine an Implicit Association Task with a Lexical Decision Task. Participants sorted real and nonsense words while at the same time sorting older and younger faces (exp. 1), male and female faces (exp. 2), stereotypically male and female objects (exp. 3), and framed and unframed objects, which were always stereotypically male or female (exp. 4). Across the experiments, lexical decision to socially skewed w...
Does knowledge of sociolinguistic variation influence how we perceive and understand speech coming f...
Recognition proficiency was measured in a lexical decision experiment using Korean words including o...
Previous research has found that people mimic the words uttered by their interlocutors who they beli...
Recent work has shown that listeners process words faster if said by a member of the group that typi...
People learn language from their environment. At the lexical level, the environment provides informa...
People learn language from their social environment. As individuals differ in their social networks,...
Language use plays a crucial role in the consensualization of stereotypes within cultural groups. Ba...
People greatly differ in the size of their social circle. In general, interacting with more people s...
Although the face is unquestionably the most valuable source of information available to social perc...
Much of the information people process about others is related to social or competence-related chara...
When meeting someone for the very first time one spontaneously categorizes the seen person on the ba...
International audienceObjective: To differentiate the effect of compounding demands, both corporal a...
Numerous studies have shown that social categorization is a flexible process that partly depends on ...
The impact of behavioral stereotypicality on category accessibility was examined using a novel metho...
Abstract. Numerous studies have shown that social categorization is a flexible process that partly d...
Does knowledge of sociolinguistic variation influence how we perceive and understand speech coming f...
Recognition proficiency was measured in a lexical decision experiment using Korean words including o...
Previous research has found that people mimic the words uttered by their interlocutors who they beli...
Recent work has shown that listeners process words faster if said by a member of the group that typi...
People learn language from their environment. At the lexical level, the environment provides informa...
People learn language from their social environment. As individuals differ in their social networks,...
Language use plays a crucial role in the consensualization of stereotypes within cultural groups. Ba...
People greatly differ in the size of their social circle. In general, interacting with more people s...
Although the face is unquestionably the most valuable source of information available to social perc...
Much of the information people process about others is related to social or competence-related chara...
When meeting someone for the very first time one spontaneously categorizes the seen person on the ba...
International audienceObjective: To differentiate the effect of compounding demands, both corporal a...
Numerous studies have shown that social categorization is a flexible process that partly depends on ...
The impact of behavioral stereotypicality on category accessibility was examined using a novel metho...
Abstract. Numerous studies have shown that social categorization is a flexible process that partly d...
Does knowledge of sociolinguistic variation influence how we perceive and understand speech coming f...
Recognition proficiency was measured in a lexical decision experiment using Korean words including o...
Previous research has found that people mimic the words uttered by their interlocutors who they beli...